Publication | Closed Access
Ribosomes as sensors of heat and cold shock in Escherichia coli.
523
Citations
30
References
1990
Year
Protein FunctionProkaryotic SystemBiochemistryProtein FoldingNatural SciencesProtein BiosynthesisBacteriologyMolecular BiologyEscherichia ColiUniversal Stress ResponseMicrobiologySevere Temperature ShiftMolecular MicrobiologyTemperature ShiftMedicineCold ShockProtein Synthesis
Nearly all cells respond to an increase in temperature by inducing a set of proteins, called heat shock proteins (HSPs). Because a large number of other stress conditions induce the HSPs (or at least the most abundant ones), this response is often termed the universal stress response. However, a careful study of conditions that truly mimic a temperature shift suggested that these proteins are induced in response to a change in the translational capacity of the cell. To test this directly, Escherichia coli cells were treated with antibiotics that target the prokaryotic ribosome. Two-dimensional gels were used to evaluate the ability of these drugs to alter the rate of synthesis of the HSPs. One group of antibiotics induced the HSPs, whereas a second group repressed the HSPs and induced another set of proteins normally induced in response to a cold shock. Depending on the concentration used, the induction of the heat or cold shock proteins mimicked a mild or severe temperature shift. In addition, antibiotics of the cold shock-inducing group were found to block high temperature induction of the HSPs. The results implicate the ribosome as a prokaryotic sensor for the heat and cold shock response networks, a role it may serve in eukaryotes as well.
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